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How many years can Josh be an Elite QB with his playing style?


transplantbillsfan

How long will Josh last playing this way?  

183 members have voted

  1. 1. How long will Josh last playing this way?

    • 15+ more years and into his 40s... he's a unicorn and an Adonis
    • 10 years and we'll take the 5 year sacrifice for the incredibly unique combination of skillsets!
    • 5 years so git 'er done!!!
    • Josh needs to immediately adjust his playing style... this just can't last
    • Other... explain


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I can't really vote in this poll. Josh Allen's playing style has evolved every year. Why would his evolution stop now? In 2037, it's unlikely he's going to be hurdling linebackers. But, why would his play just stagnate between now, and then? My conjecture: He'll be a slightly different QB next season (as he is a slightly different QB from last season), he'll be a very different QB ten years from now, and he'll be great until he retires.

 

 

 

Edited by Rocky Landing
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37 minutes ago, MJS said:

For Cam the specific issue with his shoulder is not an accumulation of hits as a running QB. He got his shoulder torn up from one hit, then later injured it again. These were specific events in his career, not an accumulation of lots of hits while outside the pocket.

 

Cam's shoulder injuries happened when he was in the pocket. Many of his hits to the head also happened when he was in the pocket. Refs were not protecting him like other QBs, even when he was in the pocket.

   As the Bills sucked and I live in Charlotte , I watched a ton of Panthers  . Loved me some Cam and their D was also fun to watch ( Kuechly and Davis especially)

   A couple of Cam’s angry runs we have all seen but he was taking hits like this often. Almost every game ( often multiple times per game) in the Shula OC era. He takes a nasty hit on his throwing shoulder in this vid. 
    The more you put yourself in a situation to get hit, the more you get hit. Hits like this are cumulative. Inflammation, micro tears ( often called strains and sprains) , bruises to bone, tendon and ligament wear. 
    All injuries are attributed to specific plays. That doesn’t negate previous hits which weaken the system prior to catastrophic failure.

    Josh does not need to run the ball on designed runs as a staple of our rushing attack. We need a running back to do that.

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8 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

Josh Allen has now been an Elite QB for 2 years. He's going to be 26 by next season.

 

I love him. He can have my babies... and I'm a dude.

 

Regardless, even though he sure as hell seems like Superman... he's not. 

 

I watch Josh Allen and firmly believe this team will win multiple Super Bowls with him as our QB regardless, but how long will he last playing the way he has played the last 2 years? I say 2 years because I think these last 2 years were about the sweet spot of the run/pass ratio.

 

So what do you guys think about how long he can last with this playing style?

 

And for some references as far as some notable "running" QBs compared with JA over the career and 2020-2021 run% of total QB plays.

 

Josh Allen (4 years): 21.1% (but it's been 27.8% the last 2 years)

Russell Wilson (10 year): 17.9%

Mike Vick (13 years with 2 year hiatus): 27.1%

Cam Newton (11 years): 25%

Steve Young (15 years): 17.4%

Randall Cunningham (16 years): 18%

Lamar Jackson (4 years): 46.3%

John Elway (16 years): 10.7%

Rg3 (7 years): 24.2%

 

 

I look at all of this and wonder if our Super Bowl window without adjustment is 5 years. I don't think this will be a huge problem because he's smart and is incredibly well built physically.

 

Still makes you wonder if he will last til he's 40.

 

While I hope he can go longer, a strong 15 year career out of JA would be awesome and obtainable IMO.

 

It would surprisingly be 4-5 more years than JK.

Edited by BillsFan619
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24 minutes ago, Buffalo Boy said:

   As the Bills sucked and I live in Charlotte , I watched a ton of Panthers  . Loved me some Cam and their D was also fun to watch ( Kuechly and Davis especially)

   A couple of Cam’s angry runs we have all seen but he was taking hits like this often. Almost every game ( often multiple times per game) in the Shula OC era. He takes a nasty hit on his throwing shoulder in this vid. 
    The more you put yourself in a situation to get hit, the more you get hit. Hits like this are cumulative. Inflammation, micro tears ( often called strains and sprains) , bruises to bone, tendon and ligament wear. 
    All injuries are attributed to specific plays. That doesn’t negate previous hits which weaken the system prior to catastrophic failure.

    Josh does not need to run the ball on designed runs as a staple of our rushing attack. We need a running back to do that.

So you are speculating that he would not have torn his shoulder if he had not accumulated hits in previous games?

 

I think that is impossible to determine.

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I'm hoping he can last as long as Big Ben did as an elite QB and hopefully we can win two titles.  The problem is the coaching in the NFL has gotten a lot better and I don't know if you can make Cowher and Tomlin-like gameday mistakes and still win the two trophies.  Josh's body isn't the the threat to Buffalo finally winning a Super Bowl.  McD's brain is.

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I would think, ten years or less, sooner or later some DB is gonna clean his clock so to speak, then again he may have the uncanny ability to avoid injury causing hits for the next decade plus, one can only hope…

 

Go Bills!!!

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55 minutes ago, Rocky Landing said:

I can't really vote in this poll. Josh Allen's playing style has evolved every year. Why would his evolution stop now? In 2037, it's unlikely he's going to be hurdling linebackers. But, why would his play just stagnate between now, and then? My conjecture: He'll be a slightly different QB next season (as he is a slightly different QB from last season), he'll be a very different QB ten years from now, and he'll be great until he retires.

 

 

 

 

Agree with this. Like all great veteran QBs, the team's focus will shift to the O-line and offensive weapons. 

 

Josh will be more and more protected as he gets older. The "do it all yourself" mentality will decrease over time. Another poster mentioned that unlike Lamar Jackson or Cam Newton, Allen is a great passer and not just runner. So he will evolve. No doubt about it.

 

I believe that evolution starts with Dorsey. The reason being, Allen has more say now. If Allen wants to throw bombs instead of running RPOs, I believe Allen now has the sway to make that audible. Daboll had too much power since he was there from the beginning with Josh. 

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I voted 5 b/c that was the choice---and 10 years is too long IMO.

 

He will NOT be performing in this way and at this level for ten more years--his body won't hold up that long IMO.

 

He'll also lose a step at some point.  

 

We still have a bunch of time.


The reality is probably more than 5, but less than 10 IMO.

 

 

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While he takes more hits than most QB's because of his running, he doesn't initiate the hits like Cam did, i think that did him in, and he doesn't really take hard hits. Hopefully, he continues to get better at avoiding the big hits.

He's different than most QBs that run, like Jordan Palmer said, he's the greatest athlete to play QB. That will make him stand out above the others.

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It's been proven that running QBs, if you even want to classify Allen as one, do not get hurt at a higher rate than stationary QBs. I think the increased risk of injury getting tackled in the open field as a runner is offset by escapabilty in the pocket.

 

It's really just the luck of the draw and impossible to say how long he'll stay healthy at this point. All it takes is one misstep or flukey hit.

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8 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

Josh Allen has now been an Elite QB for 2 years. He's going to be 26 by next season.

 

I love him. He can have my babies... and I'm a dude.

 

Regardless, even though he sure as hell seems like Superman... he's not. 

 

I watch Josh Allen and firmly believe this team will win multiple Super Bowls with him as our QB regardless, but how long will he last playing the way he has played the last 2 years? I say 2 years because I think these last 2 years were about the sweet spot of the run/pass ratio.

 

So what do you guys think about how long he can last with this playing style?

 

And for some references as far as some notable "running" QBs compared with JA over the career and 2020-2021 run% of total QB plays.

 

Josh Allen (4 years): 21.1% (but it's been 27.8% the last 2 years)

Russell Wilson (10 year): 17.9%

Mike Vick (13 years with 2 year hiatus): 27.1%

Cam Newton (11 years): 25%

Steve Young (15 years): 17.4%

Randall Cunningham (16 years): 18%

Lamar Jackson (4 years): 46.3%

John Elway (16 years): 10.7%

Rg3 (7 years): 24.2%

 

 

I look at all of this and wonder if our Super Bowl window without adjustment is 5 years. I don't think this will be a huge problem because he's smart and is incredibly well built physically.

 

Still makes you wonder if he will last til he's 40.

 

 

You'd be having the babies, Son

 

I'm curious where you sourced (or how you calculated) this data?

 

I just looked quickly at the last 2 years on pro-football-reference.com, and when I take Allen rush attempts/(rush attempts plus pass attempts)*100 I get:

2021: 22.7%

2020: 19.9%

 

Which can not average to "27.8% over the last 2 years", so it makes me wonder about your overall numbers.

 

That's not to take away from your overall point, which is that running as much as Josh does, and in the style that he does (taking on contact, stiff-arming dudes) is going to keep putting a lot of wear and tear on him.

 

Beane clearly acknowledged this in his end of year presser.   (It's about 38:50 if you want to listen) It was part of questions about Mitch Trubisky and backup QB.  Beane said he's up there screaming for Josh to get down, that he doesn't ever get on to Josh for throwing interceptions or fumbles, the only time he gets on him is for taking unnecessary hits.  He said "that's his playstyle, that's why we love him, but a backup QB is very important knowing the way he plays the game".  In response to the next question, he said that Josh likes to run the ball, he enjoys it, "I think it gets him lathered up" "he's a linebacker playing QB, that's his mentality.  I want him to get down, he wants to run over somebody"  He said "he's improved" 😄

 

Beane also said about the OL that "it starts with protecting Josh" and that "part of protecting Josh is the run game"

 

I think that Josh reportedly does a lot of things right - he mentioned after the "Josh Allen is Gumby" hit he took from Bosa in the Chargers game, that he is working with trainers in Cali and on the Bills staff to "make sure he is flexible but still strong".  BangedupBills on that hit observed that Josh had good hip flexibility and that likely protected his knee ligaments in that hit (I think I have that right).  Probably flexibility is a reason his toe sprain put him in injury report for a week instead of taking him out for several weeks.  But these things do accumulate and take a toll, and while flexibility helps, it's overall luck that it hasn't been pushed too far.

 

Jim Kubiak, who analyzes Allen for TBN put it bluntly, something like (paraphrase) "Is Josh Allen the best running back on the Buffalo Bills?  If so, why?  And if not, why is he being used that way?"

 

I will make a counter-point that I think Josh is more in control when he runs, than at times in the pocket.  Overall, I think there are data out there showing that running QB do not get injured more when they run, than they do when they're in the pocket.  Maybe someone will provide it.

 

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18 minutes ago, klos63 said:

While he takes more hits than most QB's because of his running, he doesn't initiate the hits like Cam did

 

Are you freakin' kidding me?  Beane disagrees with you and so do my eyeballs.

 

I do think over the last 3 years, Josh is working to get down or get out of bounds more and initiate contact less, but he absolutely initiates hits at times.

 

Hopefully Beane learned something from how Cam was handled on the Panthers, and will try to invest more in the OL and the skill positions than the Panthers did.

 

 

 

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